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Genre

malay rap

Top Malay rap Artists

Showing 25 of 598 artists
1

1.3 million

10.0 million listeners

2

327,254

9.7 million listeners

3

124,553

6.4 million listeners

4

1.9 million

3.1 million listeners

5

112,091

753,297 listeners

6

71,314

495,691 listeners

7

21,598

404,813 listeners

8

138,647

403,191 listeners

9

Yonnyboii

Malaysia

183,099

389,092 listeners

10

233,774

369,015 listeners

11

215,682

310,550 listeners

12

Bunga

Malaysia

27,766

303,098 listeners

13

DOLLA

Malaysia

73,668

292,013 listeners

14

109,568

291,383 listeners

15

584,779

290,785 listeners

16

3,020

286,843 listeners

17

Ramengvrl

Indonesia

78,116

275,226 listeners

18

7,082

253,704 listeners

19

47,975

238,929 listeners

20

Joe Flizzow

Malaysia

229,552

238,587 listeners

21

2,551

231,398 listeners

22

Amsyar Leee

Malaysia

7,591

228,920 listeners

23

34,533

220,683 listeners

24

676

212,692 listeners

25

328

212,653 listeners

About Malay rap

Malay rap is the Malay-language branch of hip hop, a genre that blends hard-edged beats, rapid-fire flows, and storytelling with the nuance and rhythm of Bahasa Melayu. It’s a cultural fingerprint of urban Southeast Asia, where local slang, social realities, and multilingual code-switching color the verses as much as the bass lines color the soundscape. What sets Malay rap apart is its ability to ride global rap conventions while speaking directly to Malay-speaking communities in Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, and beyond, infusing the music with regional identity and street-level perspectives.

Origins trace back to the 1990s, when Malaysian artists began crafting rap in Malay rather than in English. Pioneers like KRU—an iconic trio of brothers who helped popularize Malay-language hip hop through radio and television exposure—laid the groundwork by blending hip hop with Malay pop sensibilities. As the scene matured, artists in Kuala Lumpur and other Malaysian cities pushed the form toward more personal and social storytelling, and the underground scene began to cohere into a recognizable genre. By the turn of the century, Malay rap had moved from novelty singles to a legitimate voice within the national music conversation.

In parallel to Malaysia’s growth, Singapore developed its own Malay rap current. While the Singapore scene has its own dynamics and artists, the core idea remained the same: rap in Malay that tackles everyday life, aspiration, and local culture with wit and grit. Across both nations, the genre started to flourish thanks to independent labels, open-mike nights, and online platforms that gave artists a way to reach audiences without relying solely on traditional radio play.

Key artists and ambassadors of the genre include pioneers who defined the template and later generations who pushed it forward. Joe Flizzow and Malique Idris, as the duo Too Phat, became one of Malay rap’s most recognizable faces in the 2000s, helping bring the sound into mainstream Malaysian pop culture. Their craft—clear storytelling, polished flows, and relatable themes—set a standard for lyrical economy and punchlines that many younger rappers admire. Altimet emerged as a distinctive voice with a more aggressive, clever wordplay style and a broader social perspective. In recent years, younger talents such as Yung Raja (based in Singapore) have helped push Malay rap onto international stages, pairing Malay and English verses and appealing to global listeners who crave bilingual, cross-cultural rap. Female artists like Zamaera have also grown the scene, proving that Malay rap can be expressive across genders and perspectives.

Malay rap thrives in Malaysia and Singapore as its core markets, with Brunei and the Malay-speaking communities in southern Thailand, Sabah and Sarawak also contributing to a regional ecosystem. The genre also finds life online and in diasporic communities in the UK, Australia, and North America, where artists release tracks for Malay-speaking audiences abroad, as well as curious listeners from broader hip hop scenes. Musically, Malay rap often blends with pop, R&B, trap, and dancehall, and vocal delivery ranges from hard, streetwise bars to more melodic, sing-rap hybrids that reflect the region’s linguistic diversity.

In short, Malay rap is a living, evolving conversation: a local-global bridge that honors its roots while constantly reinventing itself through language, rhythm, and storytelling.